IAS/Park City Mathematics Institute
October 31, 2024: PCMI 2025 Information and applications now available. Click on the program links below.
The IAS/Park City Mathematics Institute, a three-week residential summer session, will be held July 6-26, 2025 in Park City, Utah.
PCMI 2025 Research Topic: Probabilistic and Extremal Combinatorics
Organized by Julia Böttcher (LSE), Jacob Fox (Stanford University), Penny Haxell (University of Waterloo), Robert Morris (IMPA), and Wojciech Samotij (Tel Aviv University).
Course descriptions and additional information on the Graduate Summer School program can be found here.
Information on the Research Program can be found here.
The Undergraduate Summer School, will consist of a three-week program led by Yuval Wigderson (ETH Zürich) as well as an interactive Experimental Math Lab (XML).
The Undergraduate Faculty Program will be a three-week program led by Cory Palmer (University of Montana).
The Workshop on Rehumanizing Mathematics, led by Rochelle Gutierrez, will be held July 6-19, 2025.
PCMI encourages applications from all those with interest in the program, both from the US and internationally. Our goal is to provide a welcoming community for all participants.
This conference supports the Welcoming Environment Statement of the Association for Women in Mathematics.
If you have questions please contact us at pcmi@ias.edu.
The IAS/Park City Mathematics Program (PCMI) is an outreach program of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS). Held in Park City, Utah, IAS/PCMI is an intensive three-week residential conference that includes several parallel sets of activities aimed at different groups of participants across the entire mathematics community. These activities include:
- program for mathematics researchers
- short courses for graduate students
- lecture series for undergraduate students
- undergraduate faculty program
- faculty workshop on rehumanizing mathematics
At the annual Summer Session, all of PCMI's programs meet simultaneously, pursuing individual courses of study designed to enrich participants in mathematical topics appropriate for their level, and participating in cross-program activities based on the principle that each group has something important to teach and to learn from the others. The rich mathematical experience combined with interaction among groups with different backgrounds and professional needs increases each participant's appreciation of the mathematical community as a whole and results in an increased understanding and awareness of the issues confronting mathematics and mathematics education today.
Acknowledgments
Major funding from:
Simons Foundation
National Science Foundation
With generous support from:
Clay Mathematics Institute Senior Scholar Program